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Native Pathways to Education
Alaska Native Cultural Resources
Indigenous Knowledge Systems
Indigenous Education Worldwide
 

Yup'ik RavenMarshall Cultural Atlas

This collection of student work is from Frank Keim's classes. He has wanted to share these works for others to use as an example of Culturally-based curriculum and documentation. These documents have been OCR-scanned. These are available for educational use only.

 

 

 

 

Barbara Andrew
Fiction
5-1-91

"Woof-Woof"

 

A long time ago up in the Alaska Range where temperatures drop to -8OF* there lived an old wise man. This man's name was Scott Wickner. He was from France and wanted to see a different way of life and some new scenery.

Scott picked the Alaska Range because he had heard about lights that flashed across the night sky in outrageous colors. He also had heard that the air was clean and crisp there and that the sunrises and sunsets were breathtakingly magnificent.

Before Scott left France he had only heard a little bit about wolves. But he didn't know how they looked or what they could do.

When he finally arrived in the Alaska Range he discovered that he needed to build a house. While he was walking into the woods to cut some house logs he spotted a pack of animals walking ahead of him. The pack of animals did not make a sound as they moved through the woods. Scott wondered what they were.

Later after he made his cabin he was still wondering what they were and why they were still around.

Once, while he was taking a nature walk he came upon a cave where he found a litter of little pups. He didn't know how they got there or whose they were, so he brought them back to his cabin. He at first called them "four legs."

Later that night when the Wolves found their pups gone, they barked and howled in anger. When the pups heard this howling, they began making a "woof-woof" sound. Since Scott heard them do this every day from that first night, he started calling them "woof-woof." And one day he called them "Wolf."

 

The End

 "Woof-Woof"

Alpha and Beta

- Clarissa lyakitan

WOLF LAIR

- Joey Coffee

Teddy's Adventure

- Palassa Sergie

Snoopy

- James Oney

A Wolf Named Ralph

- Natalia Sergie

"Woof-Woof"

- Barbara Andrew

One Eye

- Tina Papp

True Tales

 

Small Tales

 

Poems

Christmastime Tales
Stories real and imaginary about Christmas, Slavik, and the New Year
Winter, 1996
Christmastime Tales II
Stories about Christmas, Slavik, and the New Year
Winter, 1998
Christmastime Tales III
Stories about Christmas, Slavik, and the New Year
Winter, 2000
Summer Time Tails 1992 Summertime Tails II 1993 Summertime Tails III
Summertime Tails IV Fall, 1995 Summertime Tails V Fall, 1996 Summertime Tails VI Fall, 1997
Summertime Tails VII Fall, 1999 Signs of the Times November 1996 Creative Stories From Creative Imaginations
Mustang Mind Manglers - Stories of the Far Out, the Frightening and the Fantastic 1993 Yupik Gourmet - A Book of Recipes  
M&M Monthly    
Happy Moose Hunting! September Edition 1997 Happy Easter! March/April 1998 Merry Christmas December Edition 1997
Happy Valentine’s Day! February Edition 1998 Happy Easter! March/April Edition 2000 Happy Thanksgiving Nov. Edition, 1997
Happy Halloween October 1997 Edition Edible and Useful Plants of Scammon Bay Edible Plants of Hooper Bay 1981
The Flowers of Scammon Bay Alaska Poems of Hooper Bay Scammon Bay (Upward Bound Students)
Family Trees and the Buzzy Lord It takes a Village - A guide for parents May 1997 People in Our Community
Buildings and Personalities of Marshall Marshall Village PROFILE Qigeckalleq Pellullermeng ‘A Glimpse of the Past’
Raven’s Stories Spring 1995 Bird Stories from Scammon Bay The Sea Around Us
Ellamyua - The Great Weather - Stories about the Weather Spring 1996 Moose Fire - Stories and Poems about Moose November, 1998 Bears Bees and Bald Eagles Winter 1992-1993
Fish Fire and Water - Stories about fish, global warming and the future November, 1997 Wolf Fire - Stories and Poems about Wolves Bear Fire - Stories and Poems about Bears Spring, 1992

 

 
 

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Last modified August 24, 2006